Listing Owner
Member Since 2025
Renge is a renovated machiya offering 89 square meters of thoughtfully arranged living space across two floors, designed for up to five guests seeking the slower rhythms of a genuine Kyoto neighbourhood. The ground floor draws natural light through large front windows and the kitchen door that opens to a back deck, while the second floor opens up into warm wood-floored bedrooms with windows on multiple sides. Earthy wall finishes and wood accents throughout give the home a grounded, residential feel, comfortable enough for a month, quiet enough to actually rest. This is a home for guests who want to live in Kyoto rather than visit it. Families, remote workers, and anyone on an extended assignment will find the space and the kitchen provisions to settle in properly. Renge sits in a residential pocket of northern Kyoto, a four-minute walk from the Horikawa Teranouchi bus stop and seventeen minutes on foot from Imadegawa Station. The neighbourhood is not a tourist district, and that is precisely its value for guests staying a month or longer. The streets are quiet, the pace is slow, and the city feels as Kyoto residents actually experience it, a useful counterpoint to the crowds that gather further south. Right at the doorstep is Myoren-ji, a modest Nichiren temple just one minute from the house, whose grounds offer a moment of stillness at almost any hour. A fifteen-minute walk to the northwest leads to Funaoka Onsen, one of Kyoto’s most beloved public bathhouses and a designated national tangible cultural property. Built in 1923, it features beautifully carved wooden interiors, multiple bath styles including an outdoor courtyard pool, and a genuinely local atmosphere that polished spa experiences rarely replicate. On the hillside just above it sits Kenkun Shrine, dedicated to the warlord Oda Nobunaga and reached via a short wooded climb that rewards visitors with panoramic views across Kyoto’s rooftops toward the Higashiyama mountains. The two make a natural afternoon pairing. Shiramine Jingu sits eleven minutes away on foot and draws visitors for its deep association with traditional Japanese sports, most notably kemari, the ancient court football that has been played in Japan for over a thousand years. The shrine serves as something of a spiritual home for Japanese athletics, and its relatively low profile among foreign visitors means the grounds stay peaceful even on busy days in the city. The Kyoto Imperial Palace is a longer outing but a rewarding one, with the nearest entry to the palace grounds reachable in about twenty-two minutes on foot. Beyond the palace itself, the surrounding Kyoto Gyoen National Garden is a broad open parkland of gravel paths, seasonal plantings, and old-growth trees that functions as a genuine breathing space in the middle of the city. It is the kind of place that reveals itself slowly, suited to the guest who has more than a weekend to give it.
30 Days | Dates are flexible for this listing
Doshisha University
Kyoto
Kyoto
Comments: Renge sits in a quiet residential pocket of northern Kyoto, four minutes from the Horikawa Teranouchi bus stop and 17 minutes from Imadegawa Station. Away from tourist crowds, its calm streets and slower pace offer a more local Kyoto experience.
Comments: Due to dynamic pricing system the rate may change
Furnished
High Speed Internet
Wi-Fi
TV
Balcony or Patio
Stairs
Air Conditioning
Security System
Stove
Microwave
Refrigerator
Washer
Dryer
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Listing Owner
Member Since 2025
Comments: Please enquire if you want to stay longer than one month, we can do multiple months , yearly stays as well